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Scarab Sages

James Jacobs wrote:
John Kretzer wrote:
James Jacobs wrote:
Archpaladin Zousha wrote:
I suppose that's true. Maybe my problem is I'm viewing them more like the Aesir or Olympians who are a lot more...I dunno, soap-opera in temperament? Like the mythology that they're from focuses a lot more on their interpersonal relationships and melodramas that they pull on each other, rather than on their worship and stuff. I'll be the first to admit I know a lot about ancient Greek MYTHOLOGY and next to nothing about ancient Greek RELIGION. I do hope to see more books about them, though. Pathfinder's pantheon is one of the biggest draws for me. Thank you for them. :)

Keep in mind that the ancient Greeks had a LOT more time to build their mythologies than we have for Golarion.

What? You mean you don't hop into the dimensional traveler and use your front that is the Pathfinder Society to learn about Golarion? ;)
If I had that option... why would I come back? I'd move to Sandpoint and become a goblin hunter!

If you did permanently jump to Golarion, and you knew you were being given one shot at life there, and got to transform (I don't know, through interdimensional customs or some such) into a race and class what would they be?

Dark Archive

Pathfinder Starfinder Roleplaying Game Subscriber

You sure that life of killing sentient beings and constantly almost dying horribly in world where lot of different beings are able to inflict fate worse than death upon you sounds like fine life? :D Along with apocalyptic world ending threats and living on planet that is basically a can for universe ending worm


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James Jacobs wrote:
If I had that option... why would I come back? I'd move to Sandpoint and become a goblin hunter!

What works best as goblin bate? Dogs? Horses? Written words? (provoking them)

... Gunpoweder?

I'm curious. I'd think it'd be fun if my PCs were to find something or carry around something that Goblins would hunt the party for. Like, ambushing the party for the sole purpose of destroying the wagon full of books they just recovered, or something like that.


Have you watched Local Hero? (The movie with Burt Reynolds and a young Peter Capaldi among the cast members, to avoid confusion, since it seems like it'd be a title that's been used more than once.)


Will we find out what the final hardcover book this year is at Paizo Con or before that?


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Hey James,

I have a serious question this time.

I have read in several places that Chaotic religions ore outlawed in Cheliax. So what is the punishment if you are found out to be faithful such religion?

Paizo Employee Creative Director

1 person marked this as a favorite.
Duiker wrote:
If you did permanently jump to Golarion, and you knew you were being given one shot at life there, and got to transform (I don't know, through interdimensional customs or some such) into a race and class what would they be?

PROBABLY an elven bard.


Pathfinder Rulebook Subscriber

Have you ever played in a "you-be-you" game/campaign?

Paizo Employee Creative Director

CorvusMask wrote:
You sure that life of killing sentient beings and constantly almost dying horribly in world where lot of different beings are able to inflict fate worse than death upon you sounds like fine life? :D Along with apocalyptic world ending threats and living on planet that is basically a can for universe ending worm

There's more to Golarion than murder and apocalypse. And at times, depending on my day or mood and on world events... absolutely I think Golarion'd be a better place to live.

Paizo Employee Creative Director

Tels wrote:
James Jacobs wrote:
If I had that option... why would I come back? I'd move to Sandpoint and become a goblin hunter!

What works best as goblin bate? Dogs? Horses? Written words? (provoking them)

... Gunpoweder?

I'm curious. I'd think it'd be fun if my PCs were to find something or carry around something that Goblins would hunt the party for. Like, ambushing the party for the sole purpose of destroying the wagon full of books they just recovered, or something like that.

Dogs, probably.

Goblins would LOVE gunpowder if they saw it.

And goblins are evil and crazy. Pretty much ANYTHING is an excuse for them to attack a caravan. So... make it something tragic for them to wreck... like a load of beautiful paintings. Or maybe several crates of puppies.

Paizo Employee Creative Director

Kajehase wrote:
Have you watched Local Hero? (The movie with Burt Reynolds and a young Peter Capaldi among the cast members, to avoid confusion, since it seems like it'd be a title that's been used more than once.)

Haven't seen it.

Paizo Employee Creative Director

Dragon78 wrote:
Will we find out what the final hardcover book this year is at Paizo Con or before that?

It'll be announced at the latest at Paizocon. Might leak/announce before that, but I believe Paizocon is the current plan. It REALLY depends on when we have to send out the solicitations.

Paizo Employee Creative Director

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John Kretzer wrote:

Hey James,

I have a serious question this time.

I have read in several places that Chaotic religions ore outlawed in Cheliax. So what is the punishment if you are found out to be faithful such religion?

Depends on the religion and the extent. In some cases, a fine or a few days imprisonment or hard labor are enough, in a case where it's a minor worshiper of a non-confrontational chaotic deity like Cayden Cailean. But in a case where you're an actual cleric of a rabble-rouser like Desna or Milani, or an anarchist like Rovagug or Gorum... life imprisinmont or death by torture (aka "excruciation") or mind control/forced religion change are the most common; best you could look forward to is exile, if you're LUCKY.

Paizo Employee Creative Director

Kryzbyn wrote:
Have you ever played in a "you-be-you" game/campaign?

No. Not that I recall, at least. I might have in college at one point but if I did... it was unmemorable.


James Jacobs wrote:
John Kretzer wrote:

Hey James,

I have a serious question this time.

I have read in several places that Chaotic religions ore outlawed in Cheliax. So what is the punishment if you are found out to be faithful such religion?

Depends on the religion and the extent. In some cases, a fine or a few days imprisonment or hard labor are enough, in a case where it's a minor worshiper of a non-confrontational chaotic deity like Cayden Cailean. But in a case where you're an actual cleric of a rabble-rouser like Desna or Milani, or an anarchist like Rovagug or Gorum... life imprisinmont or death by torture (aka "excruciation") or mind control/forced religion change are the most common; best you could look forward to is exile, if you're LUCKY.

And according to the fluff...:
... demon-worshipers get damned directly to hell in an excruciating and awful ritual and do not pass go, if I read the fiction in the back of Council of Thieves correctly.
Grand Lodge

Pathfinder PF Special Edition, Starfinder Roleplaying Game Subscriber
The NPC wrote:
James Jacobs wrote:
The NPC wrote:

Mr. James Jacobs,

Greater restoration has been stated to be able to cure insanity and genetic disease. Could greater restoration could be used to heal the mind of a child left alone in a closet for the first 7 years of her life?

If being left alone for 7 years resulted in insanity of some sort, yes. If the child was sane but merely uneducated and ignorant of the world, no, the spell would not magically impart to the child all that knowledge.
You've never heard of feral children?

They generally don't turn out well, Disney and Burrough stories to the contrary.

If I'm not mistaken, all the spell will do is restore a mind as to what it would be developed in those conditions. The mind of such a child would already be in it's normal state, no?

Paizo Employee Creative Director

Tacticslion wrote:
James Jacobs wrote:
John Kretzer wrote:

Hey James,

I have a serious question this time.

I have read in several places that Chaotic religions ore outlawed in Cheliax. So what is the punishment if you are found out to be faithful such religion?

Depends on the religion and the extent. In some cases, a fine or a few days imprisonment or hard labor are enough, in a case where it's a minor worshiper of a non-confrontational chaotic deity like Cayden Cailean. But in a case where you're an actual cleric of a rabble-rouser like Desna or Milani, or an anarchist like Rovagug or Gorum... life imprisinmont or death by torture (aka "excruciation") or mind control/forced religion change are the most common; best you could look forward to is exile, if you're LUCKY.
** spoiler omitted **

Not quite. Demon worshipers would go to the Abyss. DEVIL worshipers go to Hell.

Paizo Employee Creative Director

LazarX wrote:
The NPC wrote:
James Jacobs wrote:
The NPC wrote:

Mr. James Jacobs,

Greater restoration has been stated to be able to cure insanity and genetic disease. Could greater restoration could be used to heal the mind of a child left alone in a closet for the first 7 years of her life?

If being left alone for 7 years resulted in insanity of some sort, yes. If the child was sane but merely uneducated and ignorant of the world, no, the spell would not magically impart to the child all that knowledge.
You've never heard of feral children?

They generally don't turn out well, Disney and Burrough stories to the contrary.

If I'm not mistaken, all the spell will do is restore a mind as to what it would be developed in those conditions. The mind of such a child would already be in it's normal state, no?

And a greater restoration would indeed cure the madness and insanity part of their problems, but would do nothing to help them integrate into society. A kid who spends the first 7 years of life in a closet wouldn't have a spell magically impart to her mind what the sky is, for example, but that spell might likely make her less likely to go insane or freak out upon seeing the sky for the first time.

The mind of a child kept locked in a closet, in other words, would be restored to normal state... but she'd still have no knowledge or memories or anything about what exists OUTSIDE of the closet. That kind of thing is beyond the scope of the spell.


James Jacobs wrote:
Tels wrote:
James Jacobs wrote:
If I had that option... why would I come back? I'd move to Sandpoint and become a goblin hunter!

What works best as goblin bate? Dogs? Horses? Written words? (provoking them)

... Gunpoweder?

I'm curious. I'd think it'd be fun if my PCs were to find something or carry around something that Goblins would hunt the party for. Like, ambushing the party for the sole purpose of destroying the wagon full of books they just recovered, or something like that.

Dogs, probably.

Goblins would LOVE gunpowder if they saw it.

And goblins are evil and crazy. Pretty much ANYTHING is an excuse for them to attack a caravan. So... make it something tragic for them to wreck... like a load of beautiful paintings. Or maybe several crates of puppies.

Hmm... perhaps an encounter with an underground dog fighting circuit and they rescue a bunch of puppies that were being bred for combat...


James Jacobs wrote:
John Kretzer wrote:

Hey James,

I have a serious question this time.

I have read in several places that Chaotic religions ore outlawed in Cheliax. So what is the punishment if you are found out to be faithful such religion?

Depends on the religion and the extent. In some cases, a fine or a few days imprisonment or hard labor are enough, in a case where it's a minor worshiper of a non-confrontational chaotic deity like Cayden Cailean. But in a case where you're an actual cleric of a rabble-rouser like Desna or Milani, or an anarchist like Rovagug or Gorum... life imprisinmont or death by torture (aka "excruciation") or mind control/forced religion change are the most common; best you could look forward to is exile, if you're LUCKY.

Wow that is kinda lighter than I thought it would be...for the non-confrontational chaotic deity.

What about for a Calistria worshiper? Where does she fall?

Radiant Oath

Pathfinder Adventure Path, Lost Omens, Rulebook, Starfinder Adventure Path, Starfinder Roleplaying Game, Starfinder Society Subscriber

I just read an article showing how the wealthy elite have systematically crushed the will of American youth with student debt, consumerism and the thuggish responses to peaceful protest. Is there ANY hope left in this world? :(

Dark Archive

Pathfinder Starfinder Roleplaying Game Subscriber
James Jacobs wrote:
There's more to Golarion than murder and apocalypse. And at times, depending on my day or mood and on world events... absolutely I think Golarion'd be a better place to live.

Wow, thats cynical. I mean, Golarion is better even with all demons/devils/daemons/qilippoths and tentacle horrors from beyond the stars? Harsh man

Though honestly, maybe I'm just weird when it comes to escapism. What would make Golarion be better place for pacifistic(fighting is cool though, but I'm type of the guy who plays rpgs as non violently as possible even when I don't plan to) loner who wants friends and that flu cure would be a easy thing?

(also lack of video games, comics, cartoons, movies, role playing games, etc would make me sad)


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James Jacobs wrote:
Tacticslion wrote:
James Jacobs wrote:
John Kretzer wrote:

Hey James,

I have a serious question this time.

I have read in several places that Chaotic religions ore outlawed in Cheliax. So what is the punishment if you are found out to be faithful such religion?

Depends on the religion and the extent. In some cases, a fine or a few days imprisonment or hard labor are enough, in a case where it's a minor worshiper of a non-confrontational chaotic deity like Cayden Cailean. But in a case where you're an actual cleric of a rabble-rouser like Desna or Milani, or an anarchist like Rovagug or Gorum... life imprisinmont or death by torture (aka "excruciation") or mind control/forced religion change are the most common; best you could look forward to is exile, if you're LUCKY.
** spoiler omitted **
Not quite. Demon worshipers would go to the Abyss. DEVIL worshipers go to Hell.

I think he's referring to something like how the various demon cults can wrongly condemn souls to their lord's realm.

Sort of like the malediction spell from Princes of Darkness (if the victim fails a save, there's a window where their soul immediately goes to Hell if they die.)

Asmodeus is an odd god - can you picture Asmodeus receiving the soul of another god's worshiper and just sending it to Pharasma's court for proper processing? If he was on speaking terms with the soul's god, anyways...

"This soul got misfiled. I'm returning it. We both know you'll pay me back."

Paizo Employee Creative Director

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John Kretzer wrote:

Wow that is kinda lighter than I thought it would be...for the non-confrontational chaotic deity.

What about for a Calistria worshiper? Where does she fall?

It's examples, not the ONLY ones. Thrune has plenty of ways to escalate a punishment.

A Calistrian would be somewhere between Milani and Cayden. More toward Milani if they caught her getting revenge on a Thrunie.

Paizo Employee Creative Director

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Archpaladin Zousha wrote:
I just read an article showing how the wealthy elite have systematically crushed the will of American youth with student debt, consumerism and the thuggish responses to peaceful protest. Is there ANY hope left in this world? :(

There's always hope. Nothing is forever.

Scarab Sages

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@Archpaladin Zousha: Take it from someone who's been literally obsessing over this sort of thing continually for the past 15 years - I think we're in the turning point now.

Dear James,

The old Adventurer's Armory mentions a board game called "Perils & Pitfalls" that is popular among Chelaxian nobility and carries political consequences for players.

Was this, by chance, intended as a twisted reference to Jack Chick's claim that RPGs were a way for Devil-worshippers to sort out wheat from chaff in their recruitment efforts ("Blackleaf, you failed to detect the poison trap - I pronounce you DEAD!")?

Paizo Employee Creative Director

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CorvusMask wrote:
James Jacobs wrote:
There's more to Golarion than murder and apocalypse. And at times, depending on my day or mood and on world events... absolutely I think Golarion'd be a better place to live.

Wow, thats cynical. I mean, Golarion is better even with all demons/devils/daemons/qilippoths and tentacle horrors from beyond the stars? Harsh man

Though honestly, maybe I'm just weird when it comes to escapism. What would make Golarion be better place for pacifistic(fighting is cool though, but I'm type of the guy who plays rpgs as non violently as possible even when I don't plan to) loner who wants friends and that flu cure would be a easy thing?

(also lack of video games, comics, cartoons, movies, role playing games, etc would make me sad)

It is indeed cynical. I've got a fair amount of cynicism bouncing around in my head as it works out... but after 43 years, the world's been pretty generous on putting that cynicism in my head in the first place! :P

And yes, I think Golarion might be better, even with all those monsters out there. Because as much monsters as there are... the world has a LOT of beauty and good. For ever qlippoth there's an azata. For every Rovagug there's a Sarenrae. Plus... magical healing and wishes and being able to fly and all that? Pretty dang compelling.

Paizo Employee Creative Director

Zhangar wrote:

I think he's referring to something like how the various demon cults can wrongly condemn souls to their lord's realm.

Sort of like the malediction spell from Princes of Darkness (if the victim fails a save, there's a window where their soul immediately goes to Hell if they die.)

Asmodeus is an odd god - can you picture Asmodeus receiving the soul of another god's worshiper and just sending it to Pharasma's court for proper processing? If he was on speaking terms with the soul's god, anyways...

"This soul got misfiled. I'm returning it. We both know you'll pay me back."

ANY evil cult can send a soul to the wrong domain by sacrifice. Demon cults, devil cults, and the rest.

What I was pointing out was that demons and devils and their cults are VERY different things in Golarion, PARTICULARLY in Cheliax. There are no demon cultists who worship Asmodeus.

Paizo Employee Creative Director

I'm Hiding In Your Closet wrote:

@Archpaladin Zousha: Take it from someone who's been literally obsessing over this sort of thing continually for the past 15 years - I think we're in the turning point now.

Dear James,

The old Adventurer's Armory mentions a board game called "Perils & Pitfalls" that is popular among Chelaxian nobility and carries political consequences for players.

Was this, by chance, intended as a twisted reference to Jack Chick's claim that RPGs were a way for Devil-worshippers to sort out wheat from chaff in their recruitment efforts ("Blackleaf, you failed to detect the poison trap - I pronounce you DEAD!")?

As far as I know it's a vague reference to the game "Snakes and Ladders," but played more extremely, and with real-world consequences. Basically, a variant on the old story of the gambler who bids a finger or a hand or whatever in a high stakes game.

Scarab Sages

Darn, that would've been a clever joke!

Dark Archive

Pathfinder Starfinder Roleplaying Game Subscriber

Huh. Now I have to ask:

Is there a way to send demon/devil worshipper's soul to one of good aligned planes?

Would they be horrified by that?


James Jacobs wrote:

ANY evil cult can send a soul to the wrong domain by sacrifice. Demon cults, devil cults, and the rest.

What I was pointing out was that demons and devils and their cults are VERY different things in Golarion, PARTICULARLY in Cheliax. There are no demon cultists who worship Asmodeus.

Sorry, I suppose I didn't communicate clearly, as that wasn't what I was trying to imply at all.

Council of Thieves, AP 1, Bastards of Erebus, Fiction: Hell's Pawns, pt 1 of 6, The Plaza of Flowers:

Pg 69 wrote:

... the canvas on the scaffold falls away to reveal the Instruments of Judgment.

In the center is a blazing furnace in the shape of a three-faced devil. From each of its gaping jaws juts a bramble of iron implements: knives, spears, chains, rods, brands, and most conspicuous of all the Tines of Cheliax. Each is a two-pronged fork sized for a stone giant, and today there are two of them.

Arrayed between the furnaces are racks of torture devices retrieved from every civilized nation on Golarion, and several not so civilized. The spiked cages of Geb are a crowd favorite, and two of them already hold prisoners. One is a fat man who begins screaming the moment he is revealed, while the other is pock-faced Gellius Bonner, the Butcher of Merrow Lane.

still pg 69 wrote:

If it were for the murders alone, Bonner might have met his Judgment at the edge of an axe or, if it were only one or two killings, in hard labor for a decade. The devilworshiping

lords of Cheliax, however, do not suffer the denizens of the Abyss in the city. For consorting with demons, Bonner earned his special voyage to Hell.

Along with,

Council of Thieves, AP 4, The Infernal Syndrome, Fiction: Hell's Pawns, pt 4 of 6, The Palace of Jubilations:

Pg 75 wrote:

“Look here,” the boss beckons to the guard. Together they kneel beside the corpse, and Jeggare indicates the marks on her lips and nose. He takes a candle from the dressing table and directs the guard to hold it up while he pries open Drulia’s jaw. A lump of what looks like red-black stone tumbles out of her mouth, seething with a vermillion haze. The guard reaches for it, but Jeggare stops his hand.

“Don’t touch it,” he says. “That appears to be a hell coal.”

The guard recoils from the stone. “A what?”

The boss peers into Drulia’s mouth, and I briefly glimpse the raw, meaty pit that has been seared out of her skull before he lays her head back. “A tool used by certain devils, or their servants, to destroy the eternal spirits of mortal beings.”

... and,

Council of Thieves, AP 5, Mother of Flies, Fiction: Hell's Pawns, pt 5 of 6, Blackrose Gardens:

Pg 71 wrote:
I tell him the story about her gambling. When I get to the part where Zandros the Fair bought up her debts and forced her to alter legal contracts with her magical calligraphy, Jeggare turns to face me. He can tell by my expression that I know how serious her crime is. In Egorian, killers go to the salt mines. Forgers go to Hell.

... all make it seem like damnation to hell is the punishment within Cheliax (or at least Egorian) to those who serve demons.

The existence of an Ebon Acolytus (found in the bestiary of AP 6) just seems to confirm that such things are not only possible but probable for explicit crimes.

That was what I meant.

I still might be misreading, but the implications seemed like there were enough tools and elements to be able to damn specific criminals (namely demonic cultists and forgers) to Hell, regardless of their actual alignment or supposed rewards. Made Cheliax (or, again, at least Egorian) much more monstrous in that regard, more, well, Hellish.

So was I just misreading? Was that just fluff-text? Or do the laws lean that way to use such devices and magic to force that?

Also, while reading through the AP to find those quotes, I came across the entry for the Lar, again, and I just have to say: I LOVE THE LAR. Oh, my word, that what an awesome creature! Did you come up with that, or someone else (and if so, do you know who)? What was the inspiration?

Kingmaker anecdote about our game:
(Incidentally, my Kingmaker King character has spent fortunes requesting the presence of Lar everywhere in his kingdom - every public building has shrines to Lar, with sacrifices offered, in the hopes that a Lar will inhabit the place and protect, guard, and promote harmony within the kingdom. Anyone who desires is taught the proper methodology for giving offerings to summon them, and it is the priestly duty of all lawful good faiths to attempt to do so at least once on behalf of a given family or privately owned location. He also invites fey, ensuring delightful places for them and free avenues to allow them to be, even in the midst of the largest cities, but that's another thing altogether...)

Liberty's Edge

James Jacobs wrote:


Maybe someday we'll create a book that's more about stories about the gods, but since that type of book would have very little game play mechanics, it's a MUCH harder book to sell to management than one that appeals to lots of players.

How about putting myths and legends (like stories about the gods) as the fiction in an AP? Rather than the "contemporary" stuff you do now.

Grand Lodge

Pathfinder PF Special Edition, Starfinder Roleplaying Game Subscriber
James Jacobs wrote:
CorvusMask wrote:
James Jacobs wrote:
There's more to Golarion than murder and apocalypse. And at times, depending on my day or mood and on world events... absolutely I think Golarion'd be a better place to live.

Wow, thats cynical. I mean, Golarion is better even with all demons/devils/daemons/qilippoths and tentacle horrors from beyond the stars? Harsh man

Though honestly, maybe I'm just weird when it comes to escapism. What would make Golarion be better place for pacifistic(fighting is cool though, but I'm type of the guy who plays rpgs as non violently as possible even when I don't plan to) loner who wants friends and that flu cure would be a easy thing?

(also lack of video games, comics, cartoons, movies, role playing games, etc would make me sad)

It is indeed cynical. I've got a fair amount of cynicism bouncing around in my head as it works out... but after 43 years, the world's been pretty generous on putting that cynicism in my head in the first place! :P

And yes, I think Golarion might be better, even with all those monsters out there. Because as much monsters as there are... the world has a LOT of beauty and good. For ever qlippoth there's an azata. For every Rovagug there's a Sarenrae. Plus... magical healing and wishes and being able to fly and all that? Pretty dang compelling.

As crapsack as this world might be... it's still a far far more interesting and beautiful place. And it's got Wi-Fi.


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Mini article on a cave with a jungle growing inside.

It's just itching to be a prehistoric adventuring site, isn't it?

Paizo Employee Creative Director

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CorvusMask wrote:

Huh. Now I have to ask:

Is there a way to send demon/devil worshipper's soul to one of good aligned planes?

Would they be horrified by that?

Yes; by redeeming them.

Paizo Employee Creative Director

1 person marked this as a favorite.
Tacticslion wrote:
James Jacobs wrote:

ANY evil cult can send a soul to the wrong domain by sacrifice. Demon cults, devil cults, and the rest.

What I was pointing out was that demons and devils and their cults are VERY different things in Golarion, PARTICULARLY in Cheliax. There are no demon cultists who worship Asmodeus.

Sorry, I suppose I didn't communicate clearly, as that wasn't what I was trying to imply at all.

** spoiler omitted **

Along with,

** spoiler omitted **

...

Damnation to Hell is indeed an option. Not the only one.


Awesome. Thanks!

Paizo Employee Creative Director

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Coridan wrote:
James Jacobs wrote:


Maybe someday we'll create a book that's more about stories about the gods, but since that type of book would have very little game play mechanics, it's a MUCH harder book to sell to management than one that appeals to lots of players.

How about putting myths and legends (like stories about the gods) as the fiction in an AP? Rather than the "contemporary" stuff you do now.

I prefer putting myths and legends all over the place, frankly. They OFTEN show up in adventures. And that lets ME make sure they're "right," since I develop the adventures. I really don't have a lot to do with the actual production of the fiction, and as such I'd rather not start revealing key load-bearing deity mythology in there that often.

Paizo Employee Creative Director

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Tels wrote:

Mini article on a cave with a jungle growing inside.

It's just itching to be a prehistoric adventuring site, isn't it?

Yes.


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How did the current dualist paradigm of paladin vs. antipaladin come to be? Was there ever a discussion on whether to include two more 'alignment champions' to cover the remaining alignment extremes? (Plus a fifth for true neutrality, I guess, if a case can be made for 'zeal in moderation'.)


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James Jacobs wrote:
As far as I know it's a vague reference to the game "Snakes and Ladders," but played more extremely, and with real-world consequences. Basically, a variant on the old story of the gambler who bids a finger or a hand or whatever in a high stakes game.

The Man from the South

Scarab Sages

Matthew Shelton wrote:
How did the current dualist paradigm of paladin vs. antipaladin come to be? Was there ever a discussion on whether to include two more 'alignment champions' to cover the remaining alignment extremes? (Plus a fifth for true neutrality, I guess, if a case can be made for 'zeal in moderation'.)

+1 to this; I liked the Paladins of Honor/Tyranny/Freedom/Slaughter setup from 3.5 Unearthed Arcana setup best, so far (though the Holy Liberator prestige class wasn't bad, either).

As stands, the Pathfinder Antipaladin looks a lot like it was taken from here, which I believe was published before the Advanced Player's Guide....

Paizo Employee Creative Director

Matthew Shelton wrote:
How did the current dualist paradigm of paladin vs. antipaladin come to be? Was there ever a discussion on whether to include two more 'alignment champions' to cover the remaining alignment extremes? (Plus a fifth for true neutrality, I guess, if a case can be made for 'zeal in moderation'.)

It came to be first in the earlier edition of the game, where the idea of an antipaladin as the opposite of a paladin first appeared.

And a HUGE part of the reason we went with it was nostalgia.

There was never a discussion of it being anything other than chaotic evil, really.

Paizo Employee Creative Director

I'm Hiding In Your Closet wrote:
Matthew Shelton wrote:
How did the current dualist paradigm of paladin vs. antipaladin come to be? Was there ever a discussion on whether to include two more 'alignment champions' to cover the remaining alignment extremes? (Plus a fifth for true neutrality, I guess, if a case can be made for 'zeal in moderation'.)

+1 to this; I liked the Paladins of Honor/Tyranny/Freedom/Slaughter setup from 3.5 Unearthed Arcana setup best, so far (though the Holy Liberator prestige class wasn't bad, either).

As stands, the Pathfinder Antipaladin looks a lot like it was taken from here, which I believe was published before the Advanced Player's Guide....

And no... I suspect Paths of Power took the same sort of inspiration we did by looking at 1st edition and then just "oppositing" the current paladin. If we HAD used that book, we would have cited it in the OGL for the APG.

Radiant Oath

Pathfinder Adventure Path, Lost Omens, Rulebook, Starfinder Adventure Path, Starfinder Roleplaying Game, Starfinder Society Subscriber

Does "Askstenn" or "Askstennar" sound like something Kellid parents would name their kid?

Paizo Employee Creative Director

Archpaladin Zousha wrote:
Does "Askstenn" or "Askstennar" sound like something Kellid parents would name their kid?

"Askstenn" sounds like "Ask Stenn" from Dragon Age.

"Askstennar" sounds too much like Alkenstar.


Pathfinder Adventure, Adventure Path, Rulebook Subscriber

what happens to a character soul when he is turned into a zombie

Radiant Oath

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James Jacobs wrote:
Archpaladin Zousha wrote:
Does "Askstenn" or "Askstennar" sound like something Kellid parents would name their kid?

"Askstenn" sounds like "Ask Stenn" from Dragon Age.

"Askstennar" sounds too much like Alkenstar.

It's a magic stone from Swedish folklore said to be made when lightning strikes the earth that's used to drive away and summon storms.

My struggle to find a Kellid-sounding name that doesn't sound like a caveman continues. -_-


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If a dragon (either forced or voluntarily) became a grave knight, would it look like a Ravener wearing plate? How would you stat that up?

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